Gasconade Valley Conference

The Gasconade Valley Conference is a high school athletic conference consisting of six small, rural high schools in Mid-Missouri. All the schools in the conference are Class 2 and 3, a norm for small rural schools in the area. The league takes its name from the Gasconade River, a tributary of the Missouri River in south-central and central Missouri.

Gasconade Valley Conference
GVC
AssociationMissouri State High School Activities Association
Members6
RegionMid-Missouri
HeadquartersN/A, N/A
CommissionerN/A

The league officially offers championships for girls in Basketball, Cross Country, Softball, Track & Field and Volleyball. And for boys the league officially sponsors championships in Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country, Soccer and Track & Field. Some schools sponsor sports that are not sponsored by the league but are sponsored by the Missouri State High School Activities Association, such as Golf, Tennis and Girls soccer. Cuba sponsors football and Steelville sponsors Eight-man football.

The league is also somewhat unusual among those in Missouri in that it offers official fall baseball and spring softball competition.

List of member schools

School Team Name Colors Town County School Enrollment (2010–12) Primary MSHSAA class*
Belle High School (Lady) Tigers     Belle Osage 215 2
Bourbon High School War Hawks     Bourbon Crawford 299 3
Cuba High School Wildcats     Cuba Crawford 388 3
Steelville High School (Lady) Cardinals     Steelville Crawford 288 3
Viburnum High School Blue Jays     Viburnum Iron 127 2
Vienna High School (Lady) Eagles     Vienna Maries 177 2

*The class in which a school competes depends on the size of the school, and the particular sport or activity. Most activities (for example, baseball, softball, track, cross country) compete in four classes, but basketball competes in five and football in six. Because basketball is by far the most popular sport in the state in regards to school participation, MSHSAA officially uses the five-class system to classify schools.[1]

References

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